User:Luziyca/Sandbox

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Luziyca/Sandbox
Nhovodiki yeRwizikuru
File:Rwizikurubanknote1.png
20000ſ banknote
ISO 4217
CodeRZN
Denominations
Subunit
 1/100zana
PluralManhovodiki
 zanamuzana
Symbolſ
 zanad
Nicknamemari
 zanamarara
Banknotes
 Freq. used20000ſ, 50000ſ, 100000ſ, 200000ſ, 500000ſ
 Rarely used1000000ſ
Coins
 Freq. used1000ſ, 2000ſ, 5000ſ, 10000ſ
 Rarely used1d, 5d, 10d, 20d, 50d, 1ſ, 2ſ, 5ſ, 10ſ, 20ſ, 50ſ, 100ſ, 250ſ, 500ſ
Demographics
Date of introduction1946
User(s)File:RwizikuruFlag.PNG Rwizikuru
Issuance
Central bankCentral Bank of Rwizikuru

The Rwizikuran nhovodiki is the currency of Rwizikuru since its independence in 1946 from Estmere. At independence having a value at par with the Estmerian shilling, its value has fallen to the point where as of 2019, the exchange rate is around 12,500 manhovodiki to 1 euclo.

History

The nhovodiki was introduced the replace the Rwizikuran shilling, which was pegged at par with the Estmerian shilling on July 1, 1946, the day prior to Rwizikuru's independence from Estmerian rule. For the remainder of 1946, the two currencies circulated side by side, before the Rwizikuran shilling was demonetized.

The name was chosen by the first governor of the Central Bank of Rwizikuru, James Ndlovu, who coined the term from the weRwizi phrase for "little shields," as a direct etymological translation for shilling, and to express the hope that "the value shall protect our nation from strife and harm."

Over decades, inflation rapidly eroded at the value of the nhovodiki, with production of muzana coins ceasing by 1960, and of all banknotes below 100ſ by 1964. In 1966, the expulsion of Marathis to Mathrabumi in an attempt by Mambo Izibongo Ngonidzashe to "eliminate bourgeois influence" by confiscating their wealth and their lands, and to expel them from Rwizikuru helped result in stagflation between 1966 and 1981, as many Rwizikurans lost their jobs, economic growth ground a halt, and inflation continued. By 1975, production of all notes below 20,000ſ were halted, with coins taking their place.

Inflation peaked at 150% in 1979, but after the death of Izibongo Ngonidzashe, and the accession of his son, Kupakwashe Ngonidzashe, fiscal policies were changed to manage inflation, and economic policies that permitted more free enterprise than under his father helped reduce the rate of inflation.

Banknotes

Coins